RCM changes fineness, mintage, prices for annual gold coins

Themes for 2012 celebrate Bluenose, gold rush, Vikings, Quebec

Canada celebrates the famed Bluenose schooner, top left, the Cariboo (British Columbia) Gold Rush of 1862, top right, Viking explorers, lower left, and the coat of arms of Quebec, lower right, on new Proof gold coins. The Bluenose 50-cent coin and the Viking $200 coins are composed of .9999 fine gold, while the $100 Cariboo and $300 Quebec coins are made from an alloy of 58.33 percent gold and 41.67 percent silver. All images courtesy of www.mint.ca.

Change is the watchword when describing the Royal Canadian Mint’s
first launch of gold collector coins during calendar year 2012.

The annual Proof 50-cent, $100, $200 and $300 coins offer a change
in precious metal fineness, mintage or price, with some coins
experiencing more than one change compared to issues in similar series
from 2011. All four denominations were released Jan. 23.

Bluenose 50-cent coin

Leading the release is the .9999 fine gold 50-cent coin, which
borrows a beloved design from Canadian numismatics, the celebrated
Canadian schooner Bluenose.

Winner of many International Fisherman’s Trophy series of yachting
races since its launch in 1921, the original Bluenose was
lost off Haiti in 1946 after a distinguished racing and commercial
career. The ship was revived when the Bluenose II was
launched in 1963.

The Bluenose has graced Canada’s 10-cent circulation coin
since 1937. A different design of the ship, derived from original
artwork by late Nova Scotia artist Philip MacReady, which was based
upon a 1921 photograph, is used for the reverse of the 2012 coin. The
design was approved by the Bluenose II Society and was developed in
collaboration with the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.

The 1.27-gram coin measures 13.92 millimeters in diameter,
unchanged from 2011; the mintage limit of 15,000 pieces and price of
$129.95 each reflect increases from 10,000 coins and a $109.95 price
in 2011.

The obverse of this and all the other 2012 gold coins in the Jan.
23 release features the Susanna Blunt effigy of Queen Elizabeth II.

Gold Rush $100

The year 2012 is the 150th anniversary of the rush to Cariboo Gold
Fields in 1862, a critical event in British Columbia’s history.

The RCM’s annual .5833 fine gold, .4167 fine silver gold coin
features a Tony Bianco design recalling the days when tales of “rivers
of gold” by four men returning from the creeks of the Cariboo region
triggered a gold rush from as far south as California in 1861.

The wild and inaccessible territory required the building of a
hugely expensive and dangerous wagon road through massive mountains,
and across deadly canyons and glacial rivers, according to the RCM.
This challenge inspired a little-known side-story of that celebrated event.

Hearing that camels had been successfully used for long distance
transport in Texas, Arizona and California, an enterprising merchant
named Frank Laumeister thought these animals would solve the big
logistical challenge of reaching the Cariboo gold fields. These
animals were not built for the treacherous mountain terrain of the
Fraser Valley and the experiment of “Laumeister’s Camels” came to a
swift end.

A miner rests on a rock in the foreground, with another miner
working a sluice box in the middle ground. A third miner rides one of
the camels in the near background, with the scenic vista of British
Columbia behind.

The coin weighs 12 grams and measures 27 millimeters, as the 2011
issue. A mintage of 2,500 pieces and a price of $599.95 reflect
reductions from the 3,000-coin mintage limit and $639.95 issue price
of the 2011 issue.

This is the lowest mintage limit for coins in this annual series.

The Vikings

For 2012, the Mint’s annual Proof gold $200 coin is crafted from
99.99 fine gold, up from the .9167 fine gold used since 1990 when the
RCM began issuing such coins.

The 2012 coin honors the Vikings, Canada’s first European
explorers and settlers, opening the Great Explorers of Canada theme, a
new one for the overall series.

While the exploits of legendary Norseman Leif Erickson are well
documented, credit for the first European sighting of Canadian land
goes to a seafaring merchant named Bjarni Herjulfsson, who in 986
ventured off course between Iceland and Greenland, according to the
RCM. His story of a great forested shore inspired Erickson to set out
on his successful quest for Vinland 15 years later, which brought him
to the coast of modern-day Newfoundland.

The legacy of the Vikings in Canada, preserved at the UNESCO World
Heritage Site of L’Anse aux Meadows at the northwest tip of
Newfoundland, is now immortalized on the coin in a design from artist
Yves Bérubé.

The reverse of the coin shows a pair of Vikings standing on the
shores of a new world, with their trusty knarr merchant ship anchored
in the background.

The coin weighs 15.43 grams, down from the previous 16-gram weight
of other issues, but the increase in fineness means the coin has more
gold — 15.43 grams versus 15.67 grams in previous issues. The size
remains 29 millimeters in diameter.

The mintage is 3,000 pieces at $1,199.95, compared to 2,800 coins
at $1,079.95 in 2011.

Provincial coat of arms

The RCM is in the process of honoring the coats of arms of each of
its provinces, issuing .5833 fine gold, .4167 fine silver $300 coins
for two provinces per year, and the first 2012 coin celebrates the
Province of Quebec.

First granted by Queen Victoria in 1868, Quebec’s coat of arms was
revised in 1939 by the provincial government to more accurately
reflect the province’s history and heraldic symbols.

A shield composed of three horizontal fields represents its
founding influences: three fleurs-de-lys at the top for its French
roots, the lion in the middle for Great Britain and the three maple
leaves at the bottom to represent Canada. Beneath the shield is the
motto JE ME SOUVIENS, which calls on all Quebecers to honor and
preserve their history.

The coin weighs 60 grams, measures 50 millimeters in diameter and
has a mintage limit of 500 pieces, unchanged from the two 2011 examples.

The coin costs $2,649.95, the same as the Nova Scotia coin
released Nov. 1 but up from the $2,429.95 for the Manitoba coin
released Jan. 10, 2011.

Pricing, ordering

Prices are listed in Canadian funds.

United States distributors for the RCM carry the various coins at
fixed prices in U.S. dollars. Gatewest Coin Ltd., Brian Jenner Inc.
and Talisman Coins are all official distributors for the RCM.

To contact Gatewest inside the United States, telephone the firm
at 204-489-9112 or visit it online at www.gatewestcoin.com.

Write to Jenner at P.O. Box 2466-a, Pasco, WA 99302, or telephone
him at 509-735-2172.

Contact Talisman by visiting its website at www.talismancoins.com,
telephone the business at 888-552-2646 or fax the company at
314-968-3801. ■

The Commission of Fine Artsâ recommendation for the Proof 2014 American Eagle platinum coin, left, brought outrage and derision at the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. The CCAC recommended the design to the right.

The Commission of Fine Artsâ recommendation for the Proof 2014 American Eagle platinum coin, left, brought outrage and derision at the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. The CCAC recommended the design to the right.

The Commission of Fine Artsâ recommendation for the Proof 2014 American Eagle platinum coin, left, brought outrage and derision at the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. The CCAC recommended the design to the right.

The Commission of Fine Artsâ recommendation for the Proof 2014 American Eagle platinum coin, left, brought outrage and derision at the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. The CCAC recommended the design to the right.

The Commission of Fine Artsâ recommendation for the Proof 2014 American Eagle platinum coin, left, brought outrage and derision at the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. The CCAC recommended the design to the right.